Abstract

Periodontitis is an inflammatory disorder caused by disintegration of the balance between the periodontal microbiome and host response. While growing evidence suggests links between periodontitis and various metabolic disorders including type 2 diabetes (T2D), non-alcoholic liver disease, and cardiovascular disease (CVD), which often coexist in individuals with abdominal obesity, factors linking periodontal inflammation to common metabolic alterations remain to be fully elucidated. More detailed characterization of metabolomic profiles associated with multiple oral and cardiometabolic traits may provide better understanding of the complexity of oral-systemic crosstalk and its underlying mechanism. We performed comprehensive profiling of plasma and salivary metabolomes using untargeted gas chromatography/mass spectrometry to investigate multivariate covariation with clinical markers of oral and systemic health in 31 T2D patients with metabolic comorbidities and 30 control subjects. Orthogonal partial least squares (OPLS) results enabled more accurate characterization of associations among 11 oral and 25 systemic clinical outcomes, and 143 salivary and 78 plasma metabolites. In particular, metabolites that reflect cardiometabolic changes were identified in both plasma and saliva, with plasma and salivary ratios of (mannose + allose):1,5-anhydroglucitol achieving areas under the curve of 0.99 and 0.92, respectively, for T2D diagnosis. Additionally, OPLS analysis of periodontal inflamed surface area (PISA) as the numerical response variable revealed shared and unique responses of metabolomic and clinical markers to PISA between healthy and T2D groups. When combined with linear regression models, we found a significant correlation between PISA and multiple metabolites in both groups, including threonate, cadaverine and hydrocinnamate in saliva, as well as lactate and pentadecanoic acid in plasma, of which plasma lactate showed a predominant trend in the healthy group. Unique metabolites associated with PISA in the T2D group included plasma phosphate and salivary malate, while those in the healthy group included plasma gluconate and salivary adenosine. Remarkably, higher PISA was correlated with altered hepatic lipid metabolism in both groups, including higher levels of triglycerides, aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase, leading to increased risk of cardiometabolic disease based on a score summarizing levels of CVD-related biomarkers. These findings revealed the potential utility of saliva for evaluating the risk of metabolic disorders without need for a blood test, and provide evidence that disrupted liver lipid metabolism may underlie the link between periodontitis and cardiometabolic disease.

Highlights

  • Periodontitis is a chronic multifactorial inflammatory condition of the oral cavity caused by imbalanced interaction between the periodontal microbiome and host inflammatory response (Lamont et al, 2018)

  • Plasma and salivary levels of mannose and allose corresponded with high HbA1c levels, while those of 1,5-AG were found to correspond with low HbA1c levels (Figure 2C)

  • This study demonstrated multivariate patterns of association among metabolome and clinical measures related to periodontal and cardiometabolic health in type 2 diabetes (T2D) patients, and highlights the potential utility of saliva for non-invasive assessment of risk to systemic health

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Summary

Introduction

Periodontitis is a chronic multifactorial inflammatory condition of the oral cavity caused by imbalanced interaction between the periodontal microbiome and host inflammatory response (Lamont et al, 2018). There are diverse clinical phenotypes (Papapanou et al, 2018), the disease affects the majority of adults worldwide, with a greater than 10% global prevalence rate of its severe form (Kassebaum et al, 2014), often characterized by destructive inflammation and tooth loss This disease contributes to systemic chronic inflammatory disorders, such as obesity and related pathologies, including metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes (T2D), nonalcoholic fatty liver disease/nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NAFLD/NASH), and cardiovascular disease (CVD) (Genco and Sanz, 2020). Chronic low-grade inflammation is regarded as a unifying feature as well as contributor to linkage between periodontitis and these pathologies (Hajishengallis and Chavakis, 2021), the underlying mechanisms related to metabolic dysfunction remain to be fully elucidated Such cardiometabolic diseases are closely intertwined, which has led to calls for caution when focusing solely on the association between periodontitis and a single cardiometabolic outcome, and highlights the need for integrated analyses of multimodal molecular and clinical variables.

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